Dumb question. Has the exact tenure of Wilson's green committee stint been realized? When did they elect or admit new members? Concurrent with the calender year, academic year, or golf year?
Judging from the articles Joe posted and a few I have seen, the captain of Princeton's golf was automatically a member of the green committee. Again judging from various articles, the golf team captain was elected near the end of one school year to serve as captain for the next school year. Contrary to Mike's claims above, Wilson was not captain his junior year (1900-1901.) He was captain for is senior year, the academic year of 1901-02. So his tenure on the green committee would have been for the same school year.
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Malcolm,
It was commonplace for these early designers like Willie Dunn to have been referred to as "consultants" or "advisors" rather than designers or architects. This is especially true in cases like Princeton where Dunn apparently planned the course but did not build it. (As opposed to Ardsley, for example, where he not only planned the course, he supervised its layout and construction.) Oftentimes in these situations the green committee ended up being credited with "laying out the course" because they (or their super or pro) were actually the ones who laid the course out on the ground. But oftentimes they weren't actually the designers. They were laying it out according to someone else's plan.
As for Willie Dunn's other designs, he certainly did get a lot of criticism later, and he wasn't afraid to use all sorts of strange and unnatural hazards such as the long cops, chocolate drops, and apparently even large cops made of rock. But I also think that tried to use what natural features he had to work with, and tried to use natural undulations for greens (as opposed to the dead level terraced greens popular at the time.)
One thing that surprises me about Dunn's work is that many of his courses were much more heavily constructed than I think we would usually expect for the time period. Some required massive tree removal and clearing, as well as major earth moving, and expense. Many were hardly the simple and quick projects we associate with the time period. As Joe Bausch mentioned on a different threads he was using contour maps in his design process even with these early courses like Princeton.